Jack and I usually get together and sit around in the afternoons and start throwing ideas around.
One of the first groups we signed was the Fifth Dimension.
About two months into the Whisky, I borrowed some money and rented a remote recording truck.
Alan`s publishing company was in the Brill Building, and of course, the Brill Building was where all the songwriters hung out because that`s where all the publishers were.
The first time I went to New York, I met Alan Freed.
I got to see all these incredible blues players, like Jimmy Reed.
One thing will lead to another and somebody will come up with a riff or a line or something we build from.
And all I was doing was playing all those funky blues tunes and rock and roll songs I`d played with my band back in Baton Rouge in the `50s.
In 1965, Gibson made the red one I use now, and a black one, which was the first black 335 they ever made.
I think my favorite album was probably Realization.
I`d gone through periods where I didn`t work live performances for probably seven or eight months at a time.
I accepted an offer to do a concert for the reopening of the Mall of Memphis.
My first really good guitar was a Gibson J-45.
After that initial success, every chance we got we`d hire that remote recording truck and just record stuff at the Whisky because it was so inexpensive.
It was a trio - Eddie Rubin was playing drums, Joe Osborn on bass. And that`s when we got approached on the idea of the Whisky A Go-Go.
I think after 1970 or so, after I sold Soul City, I took off for awhile and didn`t do too many gigs.
I was working at this club in downtown L.A. from four to eight at night, just Eddie Rubin, the drummer, and I.
Guys like Otis Blackwell and Bobby Darin, and all the guys who were writing songs for Elvis at the time, just hanging around, writing songs, talking about music.
In early `57, I bought a Fender Telecaster.
When I came back to California in the early `60s I was hanging out with Jimmy Bowen, Phil Spector, and I wanted to be a record producer and work with other artists.
I learned some chords and I started watching anybody I could, once I really got into it.
The web site and the Internet are a whole new ball game.
But I always loved songs with great lyrics.
The first amp I had back in the `50s was a small Fender.
I`ve got a Fender Concert amp from the `60s, the one Joe Osborn used. He played his bass through it.
I loved playing and I was actually working two jobs.
What I really remember is that people camped out everywhere, and the fact everybody expected it might turn into a big nightmare with all sorts of hassles because back in those days everybody was smoking pot and taking acid.
Even Woodstock turned out to be a disaster. Everybody was stuck in the mud and people got sick.